Concept Guide

Table Of Contents
170| ap lldp med-network-policy-profile Dell Networking W-Series ArubaOS 6.5.x| Reference Guide
Parameter Description Range
video-signaling
Use this application type if the AP is part of a
network that requires a different policy for video
signaling than for the video media. Do not use this
application type if both the same network policies
apply to both video and video signaling traffic.
-
voice
Use this application type if the AP services IP
telephones and other appliances that support
interactive voice services.
NOTE: This is the default application type.
-
voice-signaling
Use this application type if the AP is part of a
network that requires a different policy for voice
signaling than for the voice media. Do not use this
application type if both the same network policies
apply to both voice and voice signaling traffic.
-
clone <profile>
Make a copy of an existing profile by specifying that
profile name.
-
dscp
Select a Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP)
priority value for the specified application type by
specifying a value from 0-63, where 0 is the lowest
priority level and 63 is the highest priority.
0-63
Default is 0
l2-priority <L2-priority>
Select a 802.1p priority level for the specified
application type, by specifying a value from 0-7,
where 0 is the lowest priority level and 7 is the
highest priority.
0-7
Default is 0
no ...
Issue this command to negate any setting or return
a configured parameter it to its default value.
-
tagged
Specifies if the policy applies to a to a VLAN that is
tagged with a VLAN ID or untagged. The default
value is untagged.
NOTE: When an LLDP-MED network policy is
defined for use with an untagged VLAN, then the L2
priority field is ignored and only the DSCP value is
used.
Default is
untagged
vlan <vlan>
Specify a VLAN by VLAN ID (0-4094) or VLAN name. Default is 0
Usage Guidelines
LLDP-MED (media endpoint devices) is an extension to LLDP that supports interoperability between VoIP
devices and other networking clients. LLDP-MED network policy discovery lets end-points and network devices
advertise their VLAN IDs (e.g. voice VLAN), priority levels, and DSCP values. ArubaOS supports a maximum of
eight LLDP -MED Network Policy profiles.
Creating an LLDP MED network policy profile does not apply the configuration to any AP or AP interface or
interface group. To apply the LLDP-MED network policy profile, you must associate it to an LLDP profile, then
apply that LLDP profile to an AP wired port profile.